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THIS WEEK SHOW WILL BEGIN WITH THE GARDEN GIRL ADRIANNE LET’S US KNOW THAT YOU COULD BE ENJOYING FRESH VEGETABLES IF ONLY WE WOULD BUILD A COLD FRAME.
MAGGIE SCHMIDT PRESENTS NEWS YOU CAN USE.
I SAT DOWN WITH CHARLIE SANBORN AND DISCUSSED HIS PASSION FOR MODEL TRAINS.
CHRISTINE SAN JOSE BRINGS US POETS ROW IN THE SECONE HALF OF FARM AND COUNTRY.
FOR THE BIRDS PRODUCERS AND HOSTS PAT AND JIM SANDERS LET US KNOW WHY BIRDS MATTER.
CLOSING THIS WEEK’S SHOW IS LAURA SILVERMAN’S WHAT’S COOKING. THIS WEEK’S DISH IS ONION SOUP.

This episode focuses on Maple Syrup season in NY. Sabrina visits a Maple Syrup Festival in Neversink, NY where a a Sullivan County Catskill family taps the trees and produces syrup. Guests talk about maple Syrup.

WORK SHIFT provides commentary on jobs and careers, especially as affected by current events. This episode presents and interprets the federal February 2014 jobs data. (New information for the WJFF listening area was not available at air time.)

THIS WEEK’S SHOW WILL BEGIN WITH THE GARDEN GIRL. ADRIANNE EXPLAINS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN ANNUALS AND PERRENIALS.
PAT AND JIM SANDERS HOSTS OF “FOR THE BIRDS” DISCUSS THE AMERICAN WOODCOCK.
MAGGIE SCHMIDT PRESENTS NEWS YOU CAN USE.
CHRISTINE SAN JOSE PRESENTS POETS ROW.
IN THE SECOND HALF OF THE SHOW I AM DELIGHTED TO INTRODUCE TO YOU KEITH HUBBARD, OUR NEWEST FARM AND COUNTRY REPORTER. KEITH’S NEW SEGMENT IS TITLED STAR TALK. HE WILL SHARE HIS LOVE AND KNOWLEDGE OF OUR STAR FILLED SKIES. JUPITER IS HIS SUBJECT THIS WEEK.
MAGGIE SCHMIDT INTERVIEWS AUTHOR MICHAEL FARRELL ABOUT HIS BOOK “THE SUGARMAKERS COMPANION.
CLOSING THIS WEEK’S SHOW IS LAURA SILVERMAN’S WHAT’S COOKING. THIS WEEK’S DISH IS CARROT SOUP.

This episode visits the Irish St Pat's For All Parade in Queens, NY where the LGBT community is celebrated along with inclusion and human rights. The sound of the parade and the speakers are shared, including Mayor Bill de Blasio, Grand Marshals Tom Duane and Terry McGovern, parade founder, Brendan Fay and other participants. The parade was founded in response to the well known 5th Ave St Patrick's Day Parade in NYC where the LGBT community has been excluded if they march under their own gay self-identified banner. The parade celebrates Irish Culture, social justice and gay rights.

This episode shares the motivation for citizen activists to fight fracking in NY. Josh Fox, documentary filmmaker of Gasland and a theater director talks about his reasons for making the film, shares his message at a rally, along with others fighting for environmental justice.

WORK SHIFT provides commentary on jobs and careers, especially as affected by current events. This episode, special for pledge drive season, looks at how four-footed and beaked Sullivan County residents might fare with the jobs crisis.

Valerie Mansi talks with Paul Cooper of the Two Rivers Zen Community in Honedale, Pa, discuss the missiion of the Community; Barbara Nimiri Aziz talks with Mark Condon about dogs trained to listen to children read; Valerie Mansi talks with Barbara Balliet professor of women's cultural studies and owner of Blenheim Books in Hobart, NY for women's History Month; Mark Shulgasser talks with Fred Pecora about WJFF's Pete Seeger Song Night.

WORK SHIFT provides commentary on jobs and careers, especially as affected by current events. This episode shows why a lack of federal economic involvement, while generally favorable once, has been made undesirable by the permanent jobs crisis.

Topics: The McCutcheon Case, SUpreme Court bars liimits to number of candidates a single person can contribuete to

Along with the Citzens United and the Voting Rules, Section 4 repeal, the
McCutcheon Case sells rthe US electoral process to the highest bidders - a series of decisions that the host considers acts of treason.

Valerie Mansi talks with poet Laura Moran for Woman's History and Poetry months; Jason Dole talks with Steve Erdman about his persona Lard Dog part one of a two part series; in recognition of Poetry Month Making Waves is featuring excerpts from the Spring Gathering Poetry Mike that aired on March 29th, 2014.

Guests: David Burns, Matias Viegener and Austin Young Art Collaboration

Topic: Fallen Fruit Art Collaboration

Fallen Fruit is an art collaboration originally conceived in 2004 by David Burns, Matias Viegener and Austin Young. Since 2013, David and Austin have continued the collaborative work.
This description is from the Fallen Fruit site: http://fallenfruit.org/about/ Fallen Fruit began by mapping fruit trees growing on or over public property in Los Angeles. The collaboration has expanded to include serialized public projects and site-specific installations and happenings in various cities around the world. By always working with fruit as a material or media, the catalogue of projects and works reimagine public interactions with the margins of urban space, systems of community and narrative real-time experience. Sabrina attends a Fruit Jam at Machine Project, an art space in Echo Park/Los Angeles.

WORK SHIFT provides commentary on jobs and careers, especially as affected by current events. This episode presents and analyzes the most recent Bureau of Labor Statistics employment date for the nation and the WJFF listening area.

Sabrina attends two Passover celebrations in Sullivan County. She begins the episode at a Hasidic Passover in South Fallsburg and joins a secular/progressive celebration in Beaverkill the second night.

WORK SHIFT provides commentary on jobs and careers, especially as affected by current events. This episode looks at new Federal Reserve Boar chair Janet Yellen, and what her appointment might mean for American jobs.